The United Auto Workers Douglas Fraser will offer a prospectus tonight on the possibility of a labor third party in America and an inside view of the Carter administration's co-optation of labor.
Fraser, who is president of the 1.5 million member UAW, will speak tonight at 8 p.m. at the Kennedy School's Room 150 on "Labor in American Politics."
Fraser is coming to Harvard at the behest of UAW staff member Don Stillman and Harvard Law/Public Health student Edgar James, who are running the "American Labor Movement in Crisis" student study group sponsored by the Institute of Politics.
Building a Coalition
In Detroit two weeks ago, Fraser convened a meeting of trade union, civil rights, community organizing and political groups to discuss a program to counter what he sees as a resurgence of right-wing activism.
Fraser will address tonight the question of whether the Detroit coalition-building attempt was a first step toward creating a third party in America.
Fraser resigned this past summer from a presidential labor-management council, charging that the group served only to benefit business.
Fraser, who was a close associate of former UAW president Walter Reuther, has been a leader of the left-wing within the labor movement along with such often-isolated progressives as Jerry Wurf of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) and William Wimpisinger of the International Union of Machinists.
Wimpisinger is famous for his belief that "there's nothing wrong with the labor movement that a few retirements wouldn't cure." Both Wurf and Wimpisinger will speak to the study group later this fall.
Read more in News
Opera Guild to Give Mozart's 'Abduction'Recommended Articles
-
Division of LaborW HEN UNITED Auto Worker president Douglas A. Fraser came to Harvard to deliver a speech in April 1980, he
-
Former Auto Workers Leader Likely to Join Harvard FacultyThe former head of the United Auto Workers (UAW) Union is "seriously considering" an offer to teach a course at
-
THE LACROSSE TEAM IN ENGLAND.The action of the lacrosse meeting at the Astor House in New York on February 2 is now made public.
-
LINING THEM UPMoralists following the Ivy League standard of football for athletics' sake can wag their fingers toward Hanover these days and
-
SPORTS BRIEF: Awards Banquet Yields New Leadership For Men’s Hockey SquadThe expansion continues. One year after electing two players as captains for just the fourth time in team history, the
-
Harvard Tries To Turn Tide Against Brown